Talk:Vic Toews

Latest comment: 6 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Pronunciation

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The pronunciation in the article [tævs] (rhymes with laughs) doesn't seem right to me. Shouldn't the vowel be a diphthong, as in [teıvz]? Michael Z. 2006-12-05 18:52 Z

For a non-expert in IPA, would that rhyme with "Dave's" or "waves"? If so, that's probably what was intended, but still realy just a guess by both of us, isn't it? Gene Nygaard (talk) 15:48, 21 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

The pronunciation of names in Canada should conform to the phonology of English or French. Discussions as such are irrelevant. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.241.147.192 (talk) 18:54, 22 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

this, however is not correct, as this is a germanic name, and therefore is a name pronounced as "Taves", rhyming with waves. It is pronounced the same way as Miriam Toews, whose wikipedia article has the IPA /ˈteɪvz/. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.98.30.20 (talk) 08:10, 20 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Problems with GoldDragon's preferred version

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(i)

Compare my preferred version of the following paragraph with GoldDragon's preferred version:

Toews had a difficult relationship with organized labour, and was sometimes accused of promoting anti-labour policies. His first major legislative initiative was Bill 26 (1996), which required unions to disclose the salaries of their officials and indicate how membership dues were spent, mandated union certification votes to take place within seven days of an application, and granted employees the right to prevent their dues from being donated to political parties.[1] NDP leader Gary Doer argued that the latter measure unfairly targeted his party, and suggested that corporate shareholders should be given the same right to shield their investments from party donations (an initiative more likely to weaken Progressive Conservative fundraising efforts).[2] Toews denied that his bill was anti-labour, and argued that it provided greater autonomy to individual workers.
Toews first major legislative initiative was Bill 26 (1996) which would give greater autonomy to individual workers. The law required unions to disclose the salaries of their officials and indicate how membership dues were spent, mandated union certification votes to take place within seven days of an application, and granted employees the right to prevent their dues from being donated to political parties.[3] NDP leader Gary Doer argued that the bill unfairly targeted his party, which Toews denied.[4]

1. It is no exaggeration to say that Toews had a difficult relationship with organized labour, a point which was repeatedly stressed in press reports from the period. If direct proof is required, please consider the following:

A Manitoba Labour document dated March 1 details the proposed changes to the MLRA and the rationale for such changes, as proposed by Labour Minister Vic Toews to the Manitoba Federation of Labour.
The MFL doesn't much like the rationale. Last week it held a special one-day session devoted to dealing with what seems certain to come with a majority government. We have a broad-based, right-wing attack on the labour movement, said MFL president Rob Hilliard of the government's proposals.
But Brian Shell, a Toronto-based staff lawyer for the United Steelworkers of America, was more sweeping in his remarks to the MFL. This is the testing ground of labour relations, said Shell.
Shell said that in Ontario, organized labour has suffered several changes under the Ontario Tories but adds what is being proposed by Manitoba go even further. This law goes way beyond anything Premier Mike dreams of, commented Shell. (Winnipeg Free Press, 7 May 1996, B4)
Unions blamed But Labour Minister Vic Toews blamed unions for provoking the series of strikes. "It's been the deliberate policy of the unions to put people out on strike," Toews said. "I feel that many of these strikes are for political, not economic, reasons. The public-sector unions have a political agenda. That is why they are encouraging strikes" (Winnipeg Free Press, 29 August 1996, A1.)
The former minister, Vic Toews, had a brief honeymoon period before he became point man on the Tories' controversial changes to labour legislation. As such, Toews became the target of much acrimony, to the point where his home was picketed by protesters. (Winnipeg Free Press, 28 January 1997, B9)

I'm prepared to remove the phrase "and was sometimes accused of promoting anti-labour policies", as it could be interpreted as "poisoning the well". I'm prepared to remove "denied that his bill was anti-labour" for the same reason. I'm not prepared to remove the entire section.

2. The idea that Toews' bill "gave more autonomy to individual workers" is nothing more than partisan spin. We shouldn't advocate this perspective, any more than we should be advocate the corresponding counter-spin is that the bill was anti-union.

3. Here's what Gary Doer had to say about the bill at the time:

Word of the plan brought cries of foul from Manitoba's labour movement and opposition New Democrats. They called it a blatant attempt by the Tories to restrict financial support for their political opponents. The NDP says it derives about 10 per cent of its annual contributions from unions, although that goes up to as much as 25 per cent in an election year.
NDP Leader Gary Doer said if that's the game the Tories want to play, they should also require their corporate friends to canvass their shareholders and allow them to opt out of contributing to PC coffers.

If anything, my summary erred too far in the direction of balance. I should have worded it as "NDP leader Gary Doer argued that the latter measure unfairly targeted his party, and suggested that corporate shareholders should be given the same right to shield their investments from donations to the Progressive Conservative Party".

Considering that Doer actually eliminated corporate and union donations to political parties once he became premier, I'd say the matter is entirely relevant to our encyclopedia.

(ii)

GoldDragon has argued that the following sentence should be removed:

There were also strikes at Boeing, Inco, and the Manitoba Lotteries Corporation in 1996, leading one journalist to describe it as "the busiest year for picketing since the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike".[5]

Perhaps he'll reconsider when he discovers the context of the original quote, which was presented as part of an annual summary:

Labour unrest: The busiest year for picketing since the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike makes for a hot and heated summer for Labour Minister Vic Toews. Workers at Boeing, Inco, Manitoba Lotteries Corp. and provincial nursing homes all hit the bricks muddying Toews' reputation. (Winnipeg Free Press, 31 December 1996, A8)

[For what it's worth, I don't object to GoldDragon's changes to the "Payment of Wages Fund" paragraph.]

(iii)

GoldDragon has added a bit of editorializing to the a sentence about the Canadian gun registry:

In 1997, he announced that Manitoba would not enforce or administer the Canadian gun registry, which was later plagued by cost overruns and corruption charges. (GoldDragon's change is bolded)

This sort of editorializing is pretty clearly inappropriate. I could just as easily write "which was supported by most Canadian police chiefs", if I wanted to skew the discussion in the other direction.

[I'm not going to object to GoldDragon's change to the "Lloyd Axworthy" paragraph, which is fairly incidental.]

(iv)

Compare my preferred version of the following paragraph with GoldDragon's preferred version:

Toews's relationship with the judiciary was often fractious. In 1999, he delivered a speech to the Alberta Summit on Justice that criticized judges for intervening in political matters. He was quoted as saying that judges, unlike parliamentarians, "are not well-placed to understand and represent the social, economic and political values of the public". Some attendees criticized his speech, and a representative of the Legal Aid Society of Alberta described it as "inflammatory and sensational".[6] Later in the year, a provincial judge criticized Toews for making what she described as "misleading and inaccurate" remarks about judicial appointments and the daily schedules of judges.[7]
In 1999, Toews delivered a speech to the Alberta Summit on Justice that criticized judges for intervening in political matters. He was quoted as saying that judges, unlike parliamentarians, "are not well-placed to understand and represent the social, economic and political values of the public". Some attendees criticized his speech, and a representative of the Legal Aid Society of Alberta described it as "inflammatory and sensational".[8]

1. It is not an exaggeration to say that Toews' relationship with the judiciary was often fractious. If direct proof is required, please consider the following:

I N A prepared statement expressing his regret for any ``misunderstanding, Justice Minister Vic Toews attempted yesterday to write the final chapter in a bitter public row with the province's judges.
``I regret any misunderstanding that might have been generated by my lack of clarity and take responsibility for any misunderstanding that I may have caused, Toews told the legislature, reading from a three-page statement that was brokered by lawyers acting for the government and for the province's chief judge. Toews was accused last week of tampering with a committee responsible for nominating candidates for judicial appointments. The allegations flow from discussions he had with the chairwoman of the committee, Chief Provincial Court Judge Judith Webster.
Previously, Toews said some judges are out of touch with public concerns and he mused about an elected judiciary with term limits. (Winnipeg Free Press, 14 May 1998, A1)

2. For that matter, please consider the other reference which GoldDragon is trying to cut out of the paragraph (and which I consider entirely relevant):

The provincial court's top judge took a swipe at the Justice Minister Vic Toews yesterday, expressing her "profound disappointment" with his "misleading and inaccurate" comments about the appointment of judges and their workload.
In a Free Press story Saturday about appointing three new judges, Toews said he went to the Treasury Board as soon as he received Chief Provincial Court Judge Judith Webster's request for three new judges. He also said judges work only a few hours a day.
"It is regrettable that before making these incorrect remarks, you did not consult with your senior legal staff, all of whom are well aware of the busy schedule of the provincial court," Webster wrote in a strongly worded three-page letter to Toews dated June 9 and hand-delivered to the minister's office. Provincial court made the letter available to reporters yesterday. (Winnipeg Free Press, 10 June 1999, City Page)

(v)

GoldDragon chose to remove the following paragraph entirely:

Both Toews and his department were frequent targets of opposition criticism from 1997 and 1999. The New Democrats often argued that Crown offices were underfunded, and suggested that the Justice Department's prosecutorial duties were compromised.refThese concerns became especially prominent after June 1997, when the Manitoba Court of Appeal allowed a man who admitted to having sexual intercourse with a twelve-year old girl to serve his sentence in the community rather than in prison. In making its decision, the court argued that the girl was a willing participant and possessed enough sophistication to consent. Toews expressed serious concerns about the trial's outcome, and filed leave to appeal the case to the Supreme Court of Canada. See News briefs, Associated Press, 9 June 1997, 20:13 report. Toews's decision to appeal was not controversial, but the Crown's handling of the original case soon became a source of debate. NDP Justice Critic Gord Mackintosh observed that the Crown never challenged defence claims that the girl consented to the act. See Scott Edmonds, "Girl scared into silence", Globe and Mail, 10 June 1997, A3. The New Democrats argued that departmental underfunding had led to a lax prosecution; four years later, an internal review found that the Crown's performance in the case had been substandard. See Leah Janzen, "Prosecutors' office a mess, review says", Winnipeg Free Press, 15 October 2000, A1./ref

I had considerable difficulty writing this paragraph. This particular case garnered a fair bit of media attention in Manitoba, and the criticism as regards funding is unquestionably relevant to the article -- at the same time, I didn't want to present the information in a sensational manner, or suggest that Toews was tied directly to the specifics of this particular case.

I'm prepared to compromise on this one: I'm willing to rewrite the paragraph to indicate that the NDP criticized Toews for underfunding the department (and also reference Toews' defence) without mentioning the specifics of this trial.

(vi)

Compare my preferred version of the following paragraph with GoldDragon's preferred version:

Toews was accused of misusing the powers of his office on at least two occasions. In May 1998, he was criticized for asking a judicial appointment committee to add two names to a list of proposed judges. He denied any wrongdoing, and said he only acted to ensure that more bilingual judges would be appointed to the bench.[9] The second controversy was potentially more serious. During a legislative debate in June 1999, Toews accused NDP Justice Critic Gord Mackintosh of repeatedly calling the province's Street Peace gang hotline, only to hang up before leaving a message. This announcement was not particularly noteworthy in and of itself, but questions soon arose as to how Toews had obtained the information as calls to the hotline were meant to be confidential and anonymous. He eventually acknowledged that calls from government buildings had been tracked, and that he had received Mackintosh's name from a member of his department. Premier Filmon described Toews's conduct as inappropriate, but did not remove him from office.[10] Toews was also forced to admit that the hotline itself had gone unanswered for several months.
In May 1998, he asked a judicial appointment committee to add two names to a list of proposed judges, to ensure that more bilingual judges would be appointed to the bench. Some criticized the move but Toews denied wrongdoing. [11] During a legislative debate in June 1999, Toews accused NDP Justice Critic Gord Mackintosh of mischief by repeatedly calling the province's Street Peace gang hotline, only to hang up before leaving a message. While such calls were suppose to be confidential and anonymous, Toews acknowledged that calls from government buildings had been tracked and that he had received Mackintosh's name from a member of his department. Premier Filmon described Toews's conduct as inappropriate, but did not remove him from office.[12]

1. My first sentence is not hyperbole or exaggeration: Toews was accused of misusing the powers of his office both times. I'm prepared to "soften" the intro a bit if it will draw a quicker resolution to this dispute, but it shouldn't be left out entirely.

2. GoldDragon's take on the judicial appointment committee matter is a whitewash, pure and simple. It takes Toews' word at face value, and says nothing about the reasons for the criticism. I'm prepared to adjust my wording a bit, but there's absolutely no way I'm going to accept GoldDragon's version.

Btw, readers may be interested in a more recent take on this matter:

In fact, we've seen this movie starring Toews before. If you rewind the tape to 1998, you'll find Toews accused of tampering with the committee responsible for nominating candidates for provincial judicial appointments. The allegations stemmed from discussions he had with the chairwoman of the screening committee, in which Toews reportedly rejected the list of seven judicial candidates submitted, in an apparent breach of the Provincial Court Act. Some charged Toews had tainted the process. He said it was all a misunderstanding. Whatever the reason, Toews eventually got his wish for a bilingual candidate that he named to the bench -- and who just happened to have Tory ties. (Paul Samyn, "War with judges no-brainer for Toews", Winnipeg Free Press, 12 November 2006, A9.)

3. I'm prepared to accept some "trimming" at the end of the paragraph, though I should point out that "suppose to be confidential" is a grammatical error.

(vii)

GoldDragon has argued that this:

The Progressive Conservatives were defeated in the 1999 provincial election

should be replaced with this:

The Progressive Conservatives lost power in the 1999 provincial election

In fact, only the former version is technically accurate. The PCs were defeated in the election, and lost power when they resigned from government shortly thereafter (in accordance with British parliamentary tradition).

[I'm not going to quibble about changing "argued" to "speculated", etc.]

(viii)

GoldDragon has chosen to remove this statement:

Toews also argued that religious organizations should be permitted to deny gay organizations the use of their facilities,

In fact, the statement is correct. Please consider the following:

A Canadian Alliance MP is demanding that the Doer government amend the Manitoba Human Rights Act to let religious groups deny gay organizations use of their facilities.
Camp Arnes, a Mennonite Brethren camp north of Gimli, faces a human rights complaint after telling Winnipeg's gay choir -- the Rainbow Harmony Project -- that it could not rent the camp for a weekend retreat.
Provencher MP Vic Toews said religious groups should not be singled out because of their moral position on homosexuality.
The camp asks visitors to adhere to its code of conduct, which includes not "engaging in or promoting/supporting homosexual activity or organizations."
Visitors are also banned from drinking alcohol, social dancing, support of abortion-related activities and participation in religious practices contrary to the camp's evangelical Christian faith.
Toews said Manitoba's human rights law, which protects individuals from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, is a threat to Canadians' freedom of religion. (Helen Fallding, "Camp should have right to deny gays: Alliance MP", Winnipeg Free Press, 22 November 2002, A5.)

[The "Age of Consent" wording change is trivial, and I don't object to the shifting of the "only two bills" paragraph.]

A further comment

I'm going to make my changes shortly. I've put a fair bit of time into all of this, and I expect GoldDragon and his anonymous friend to seriously engage with all of these points if they want to revert to his preferred version again.

And something else ...

I've noticed that a fair number of anonymous IPs have been reverting to GoldDragon's preferred text in the last few days, on this page and elsewhere. (Evidence: [1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7]) It's obvious that most if not all of these posts are from the same person, and I can't help but notice that s/he seems rather confident from behind his/her mask of anonymity.

I have some ideas as to whom this might be, though it may not matter: I'm far more concerned with questions of behaviour than questions of identity, and there's no question at all that this person's behaviour is profoundly suspicious. I may have to take other steps if this person keeps interfering in this matter. CJCurrie (talk) 08:18, 30 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Paul McKie, "Strike funds secret", Winnipeg Free Press, 27 May 1996, A4; Alice Krueger, "PCs plan to raise pay veil", Winnipeg Free Press, 6 December 1995, A1.
  2. ^ Alice Krueger, "Union workers can say no", Winnipeg Free Press, 13 April 1996, A4.
  3. ^ Paul McKie, "Strike funds secret", Winnipeg Free Press, 27 May 1996, A4; Alice Krueger, "PCs plan to raise pay veil", Winnipeg Free Press, 6 December 1995, A1.
  4. ^ Alice Krueger, "Union workers can say no", Winnipeg Free Press, 13 April 1996, A4.
  5. ^ "Tories agenda for '96", Winnipeg Free Press, 31 December 1996, A8.
  6. ^ Carol Harrington, "Manitoba minister riles justice conference", Globe and Mail, 30 January 1999, A16.
  7. ^ Paul McKie, "Top judge takes shot at justice boss", 10 June 1999, City Page.
  8. ^ Carol Harrington, "Manitoba minister riles justice conference", Globe and Mail, 30 January 1999, A16.
  9. ^ David Roberts, "Manitoba bar raps justice minister", Winnipeg Free Press, 8 May 1998, A17.
  10. ^ Douglas Nairne, "Filmon calls Toews' actions 'inappropriate'", 22 June 1999, City Page.
  11. ^ David Roberts, "Manitoba bar raps justice minister", Winnipeg Free Press, 8 May 1998, A17.
  12. ^ Douglas Nairne, "Filmon calls Toews' actions 'inappropriate'", 22 June 1999, City Page.

Response to CJCurrie allegations

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(i)

Toews had a difficult relationship with organized labour, and was sometimes accused of promoting anti-labour policies. His first major legislative initiative was Bill 26 (1996), which required unions to disclose the salaries of their officials and indicate how membership dues were spent, mandated union certification votes to take place within seven days of an application, and granted employees the right to prevent their dues from being donated to political parties.[1] NDP leader Gary Doer argued that the latter measure unfairly targeted his party, and suggested that corporate shareholders should be given the same right to shield their investments from party donations (an initiative more likely to weaken Progressive Conservative fundraising efforts).[2] Toews denied that his bill was anti-labour, and argued that it provided greater autonomy to individual workers.

Ending up, corporate shareholders weren't given the right to shield their investments anyhow, as Doer banned corporate donations. Also, shareholders are not forced to invest in a company, as opposed to a employee who has to become a union member to work at a certain place. Third, union officials are directly using union dues for political contributions, while a company's political contributions are segregated from the dividends due to shareholders.

None of this is especially relevant. You can interpret Doer's response as a reductio ad absurdum argument if you want, but it's still relevant for the purposes of this article. CJCurrie (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

(ii)

There were also strikes at Boeing, Inco, and the Manitoba Lotteries Corporation in 1996, leading one journalist to describe it as "the busiest year for picketing since the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike".[3]

I'm less opposed to this if we can include Toew's criticism of the strikes. Unions blamed But Labour Minister Vic Toews blamed unions for provoking the series of strikes. "It's been the deliberate policy of the unions to put people out on strike," Toews said. "I feel that many of these strikes are for political, not economic, reasons. The public-sector unions have a political agenda. That is why they are encouraging strikes" (Winnipeg Free Press, 29 August 1996, A1.) But are the Boeing and Inco strikes directly related to Toews's policy? It might be coincidence.

I wouldn't object to including Toews' response. CJCurrie (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

(iii)

In 1997, he announced that Manitoba would not enforce or administer the Canadian gun registry, which was later plagued by cost overruns and corruption charges.

True. Just see that article for details. However, it could be misleading to just state that Toews would not enforce or administer it, without giving a reason.

Not really, given that he opposed it on ideological rather than administrative grounds. CJCurrie (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

(iv)

Toews's relationship with the judiciary was often fractious. In 1999, he delivered a speech to the Alberta Summit on Justice that criticized judges for intervening in political matters. He was quoted as saying that judges, unlike parliamentarians, "are not well-placed to understand and represent the social, economic and political values of the public". Some attendees criticized his speech, and a representative of the Legal Aid Society of Alberta described it as "inflammatory and sensational".[4] Later in the year, a provincial judge criticized Toews for making what she described as "misleading and inaccurate" remarks about judicial appointments and the daily schedules of judges.[5]

The provincial judge's comments by itself don't add anything new the mix, nad leaves the reader questioning what Toews did to deserve it. Fortunately, you retrieved what he initially had to say which led to the judge's comments: Toews said some judges are out of touch with public concerns and he mused about an elected judiciary with term limits. (Winnipeg Free Press, 14 May 1998, A1)

I would first stress Toew's concerns about the judiciary, rather than portray him as picking a fight for the sake of a conflict.

I'm willing to include Toews' accusation. CJCurrie (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

(vi)

Compare my preferred version of the following paragraph with GoldDragon's preferred version:

Toews was accused of misusing the powers of his office on at least two occasions. In May 1998, he was criticized for asking a judicial appointment committee to add two names to a list of proposed judges. He denied any wrongdoing, and said he only acted to ensure that more bilingual judges would be appointed to the bench.[6] The second controversy was potentially more serious. During a legislative debate in June 1999, Toews accused NDP Justice Critic Gord Mackintosh of repeatedly calling the province's Street Peace gang hotline, only to hang up before leaving a message. This announcement was not particularly noteworthy in and of itself, but questions soon arose as to how Toews had obtained the information as calls to the hotline were meant to be confidential and anonymous. He eventually acknowledged that calls from government buildings had been tracked, and that he had received Mackintosh's name from a member of his department. Premier Filmon described Toews's conduct as inappropriate, but did not remove him from office.[7] Toews was also forced to admit that the hotline itself had gone unanswered for several months.

Well, there is the critism, so at least can we present a reason from Toews himself first? Its actually very POV-ish to jump into the criticism right off the start before establishing his position and views. Furthermore, there is a bias in the sources that CJCurrie uses exclusively, as "War with judges no-brainer for Toews" is likely an editorial. While editorials are permitted, there also must be a balancing viewpoint. I could make a charge of undue weight.

To be fair, Mackintosh engaged in mischief.

It's possible that Mackintosh was testing the system; if it was "mischief", it was trivial. Anyway, (i) I didn't actually use that particular editorial piece in the article, and (ii) I've already changed the wording to this section. CJCurrie (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

GoldDragon (talk) 02:00, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Paul McKie, "Strike funds secret", Winnipeg Free Press, 27 May 1996, A4; Alice Krueger, "PCs plan to raise pay veil", Winnipeg Free Press, 6 December 1995, A1.
  2. ^ Alice Krueger, "Union workers can say no", Winnipeg Free Press, 13 April 1996, A4.
  3. ^ "Tories agenda for '96", Winnipeg Free Press, 31 December 1996, A8.
  4. ^ Carol Harrington, "Manitoba minister riles justice conference", Globe and Mail, 30 January 1999, A16.
  5. ^ Paul McKie, "Top judge takes shot at justice boss", 10 June 1999, City Page.
  6. ^ David Roberts, "Manitoba bar raps justice minister", Winnipeg Free Press, 8 May 1998, A17.
  7. ^ Douglas Nairne, "Filmon calls Toews' actions 'inappropriate'", 22 June 1999, City Page.

Marital status

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Isn`t Toews separated from his wife? —Preceding unsigned comment added by CFriesen68 (talkcontribs) 18:34, 7 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes. According to the Canadian newspaper Xtra (link: http://www.xtra.ca/public/National/Vic_Toews_as_judge_raises_concerns-5251.aspx) they separated in 2007 and divorced in 2008 after Toews had an affair with and allegedly impregnated a Conservative junior staffer. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.246.148.42 (talk) 07:19, 21 January 2011 (UTC)Reply


Since when does 'sister in law's babysitter' count as 'junior staffer? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.240.250.73 (talk) 02:53, 16 February 2012 (UTC)Reply


This whole section is irrelveant to his public life — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.248.102.114 (talk) 23:02, 21 March 2012 (UTC)Reply

No it is not. The whole reason why it was brought up is because he raped his 15 year old babysitter and his bill wanted to catch criminals like him. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.118.249.67 (talk) 08:08, 14 May 2014 (UTC)Reply

Religion

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Yesterday, I provided Wikipedia readers with some information on the above topic. Less than 24 hours later the entire section was anonymously deleted without any explanation for the deletion. Nor were there any tags used to help me understand the nature of the disagreement. The protocol in Wikipedia is to use the discussion page to explain why edits are made. I graciously invite all editors to do so. Perhaps we can work something out that we can both agree on. This will prevent an endless and unproductive series of edits and counter edits. Thank you for listening and have a good day.Boyd Reimer (talk) 14:02, 7 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Your edits have been, and continue to be, violations of Wikipedia's WP:NPOV and WP:RS policies. Again, on a personal basis I support and agree with your position on the matter, but Wikipedia is not the place to editorialize about what a politician's position should or shouldn't be. Wikipedia is not a forum for advocacy journalism; your personal opinion on Toews, and whether or not his position on granting refugee status to American military objectors is in conflict with his stated religious beliefs or not, has no place in the article until a major media source, such as the CBC or The Globe and Mail, calls him out on it. I've never voted Conservative in my life and don't plan to start anytime soon, so I'm not trying to defend Toews here. But Wikipedia simply is not the place for what you're trying to do — whether you and I agree with it or not, people are legitimately allowed to have a different position than yours on this issue. Bearcat (talk) 18:36, 7 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Greetings Bearcat

Thank you for your explanation. I apologize. I agree with large parts of what you are saying. Therefore I will not again set up a section on “Religion.” Instead I have simply gone to the existing section on “Religion” in the Infobox and have done the following. A previous editor stated that the religion of Vic Toews was “Mennonite.”

On June 6, 2008, I spoke to Esther Epp-Tiessen from the Mennonite Central Committee who said, (quote) “I don’t think Vic Toews identifies with the Mennonite religion.” Those are not my words.

Therefore, I added a “citation needed” tag to the infobox section on “religion.”

That tag was removed within one hour of it being put there. I thought that Wikipedia welcomed citations and considered them a good thing. That is why I am wondering why some editor removed a request for a citation. (I will not assume that it was you.)

By the way, according to my understanding of religion, it is not inherited. Instead it is adopted. This is especially true of the Mennonite people who are part of the Anabaptist tradition. Boyd Reimer (talk) 15:42, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

How 'bout this one? [8] The CBC naming Toews as a Mennonite right next to his own (paraphrased) statement. The entry has been in this article without contest since Sep. 2006, so I'm thinking we'd more be looking for a quoted statement that he is not a Mennonite. Franamax (talk) 18:37, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Greetings Franamax: Wiktionary defines “Mennonite” as follows:

Mennonite

1. a group of denominations in the anabaptist movement in the Christian church 2. a member of such a denomination

[9]

The CBC quote you refered to refers to him as "of Mennonite descent." [10] That quote demonstrates that the CBC is unaware of the following:

The "Anabaptist movement" practices believers baptism “which contrasts with infant baptism.”[11] Therefore it is an intrinsic to the Mennonite faith that it is impossible to be “born” a Mennonite. By using the phrase "of Mennonite descent" the CBC has demonstrated that they are unaware that to be “born” a Mennonite is an oxymoron. That demonstration of their confusion casts much doubt on their later statement that Toews is "a Mennonite born in Paraguay"

Therefore a more reliable citation is needed. If Toews is a “member,” then which congregation has him registered as such? Boyd Reimer (talk) 21:19, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

You are making a synthesis. We have a quote from a reliable source saying "Toews is himself a Mennonite", a source where Toews is commenting in obvious discussion with the reporter. If you don't think that's correct, produce a quote from a reliable, verifiable source that says "Toews is not a Mennonite". Your reference above is to a conversation you had with someone expressing an opinion. You need something better than that. Franamax (talk) 21:26, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Greetings Franamax: You have incorrectly quoted the CBC article. Your incorrect quote is this: “Toews is himself a Mennonite.” The correct quote is this: “Toews, himself of Mennonite descent…” The word “descent” is not in your incorrect quotation. The CBC’s use of that word was the whole point of my last entry. In fact the concept of generational “descent” is the entire context of the CBC article. Therefore please re-read your source quotation, and the context of the CBC article, and then reread my last entry about that correct quotation. Thank you.Boyd Reimer (talk) 22:39, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Curb your enthusiasm. Read the whole article, don't just stop at the spot where your own point is validated. I quoted with a word-twiddle, try this: "Toews himself is a Mennonite". It's actually there. I stand by every point I've made above. Franamax (talk) 04:04, 10 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Greetings Franamax: I stand corrected. The quote is there. But what it actually means is still in question because of the article's context. Meaning (linguistics) is nothing without a context principle.

Does CBC use the word Mennonite to refer to religion? (“Religion” is the title of the infobox category.)

Or does CBC use the word Mennonite to refer to “ethnic group” or “immigration group?” (“ethnic group” and “immigration group” are not the titles of the infobox category.)

If we apply the context principle to the CBC article, I believe that the writer was referring to “Mennonite” as an “ethnic group” or “immigration group.” (Similar to Dukhobors)

The only way to be 100% certain that "Mennonite" is Toews' "religion," as stipulated by the title of the infobox category, is to know which congregation has him registered as a “member.” The word “member” is in the Wiktionary definition of “Mennonite.”

The uncertainty is still present. The best way to solve it is to let Wikipedia readers decide by providing them with a citation. Some editor (I won’t assume it was you) removed a “citation needed” tag without replacing it with a citation. That is not the policy of Wikipedia. Therefore I will put the citation in myself. Boyd Reimer (talk) 12:10, 10 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

I think putting in the ref is a wise solution. I did find a few letters to the editor at www.thecarillon.com questioning Toews active participation in the religion, but nothing definitive one way or the other. Letting the reader decide is indeed the best way to go. I've also checked the list of Mennonites article and Toews is in the "connected to" section, so everything seems fine here now. Do you agree?
Note that if you click the "history" tab you can see who is making changes to the article, and you can click on each "diff" link to see the exact change. Also, it's good practice to indent comments on talk pages by putting ":"'s at the start of your text, it makes the progress of the discussion a little more clear. Franamax (talk) 19:35, 10 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Table of contents and sub-heading style

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This article has the most unusual TOC and sub-heading style. I don't think it complies with any standard I've seen elsewhere on Wikipedia. It should to be changed to comply with other wiki articles IMO. Comments welcome. DSatYVR (talk) 16:51, 6 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

"Scandal" section

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I've removed the Scandal section for the following reasons, and putting here for discussion:

  • "Scandal" and "Controversy" sections are generally discouraged in biography articles, since they tend to focus attention on specific aspects of a person's life (and frequently are edited by people with a particular axe to grind). The preferred method is to work controversial aspects of a life into the existing prose.
  • The supporting source is just one person's opinion, published on what looks an awful lot like a blog, and is basically just an off-topic rant in reply to a "funny" story about hand-jobs. I don't see any way it can be considered reliable.
  • I don't follow any relation between gay rights and extra-marital affairs, again the linkage is one person's off-hand opinion, why should it be given any weight at all?

This is a living person's biography, so special care needs to be taken in deciding what to include and how to phrase it. I don't see any particular reason to have this information here at all, but perhaps others have some ideas on this? Franamax (talk) 19:07, 18 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think that the content would belong in this article, except for the fact that there is only a single source for it. Essentially, the only problem with the scandal section is that there is no scandal. If there were coverage in a wide array of papers, then I think that the material would need to be included, but that isn't the case.
As to whether there is a connection between gay rights and extra-marital affairs, that seems fairly straight forward -- philandering politicians who preach family value lose credibility when they are caught. But for the purposes of wikipedia, Vic Toews hasn't been caught -- there just aren't enough sources to establish this story. Blowfish (talk) 01:04, 19 March 2010 (UTC)Reply
I agree that this section looked a bit POV and not appropriate in a BLP, aside from its salacious nature. However, there are distinguished sources such as the National Post and the Calgary Herald which have confirmed the rumors of Toews's infidelity and philandering, all of which, although none of anyone else's business, do in the long run undermine any credibility he had in discussing morality issues. All that being said, I think that the "Wikipedia" way is to give a guy a break, when he or his family might be reading this article, and avoid using it as a grandstand for everyone who has a beef with him as a politician or as a neighbor, as the case may be. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Skol fir (talkcontribs) 02:27, 19 March 2010 (UTC)Reply
I got caught by the SineBot- sorry, will try to sign next time :) Skol fir (talk) 02:33, 19 March 2010 (UTC)Reply
I'd note that I'm gay and really have a personal hate-on for Vic Toews — and even I removed an earlier iteration of the extramarital affair from the article about six weeks ago (it was subsequently readded by somebody else.) Apart from the fact that it wasn't particularly well-sourced, I have yet to see any demonstration that it's actually had any measurable consequences for his career. Had Parliament censured him for it, or if a recall petition were being spearheaded, or if he's defeated in the next election and it can be credibly asserted that the affair is a primary reason for that, then it might be worth mentioning — but if the only real effect so far is that one newspaper advice columnist is calling him a hypocrite, then I'm really not sure that we've reached the standard by which it's become notable enough to be mentioned here. We're an encyclopedia, not a gossip rag. Bearcat (talk) 05:59, 19 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Minor

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Can somebody change it so that "introduction of Bill C-30" hyperlinks to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protecting_Children_from_Internet_Predators_Act? Arrivalatheathrowairport (talk) 09:27, 22 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

  Done CharlieEchoTango (contact) 09:33, 22 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Euhemerization of Omnibus Crime Bill coverage

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This section, which is on the bill and debate concerning what is widely known as the Omnibus Crime Bill, carefully and in blatantly POV fashion avoids certain key facts and also the larger public debate and scandal. That he had not read it, in fact, while sponsoring it, but also the details concerning WHAT was published on Twitter (does the phrase VikiLeaks even occur in this article), and that the bill was widely condemned for 'omnibus legislation' and included stiffer sentences for non-sexual-offender crimes like marijuana cultivation. This section has been censored and is therefore highly POV. But knowing the p.r. machines that patrol and argue on political articles, despite the No Paid Editing rule ("partisan advocacy" is really paid, as services are donated often on company time, or even public time for that matter).....I came to this article because the subject of a hypocritical politician being anti-sex while having his own sexual life called into question had come up with a friend from Australia, and also the subject of this government's persecution of the Mennonite press, what with Toews being a Mennonite and all...THAT's probably not in this article, EITHER, is it?  :-| Particularization and segregation of information, and its vetting my p.r. machines of either side, is what makes Wikipedia so diappointing in its coverage of political personalities and events; too easy to abuse and maniuplate...this article is a case in point, and a good demonstration of why I wouldn't come back to Wikipedia after being booted out for objecting to there being too much Overdue Weight on STephen Harper vs all other prime ministers....in science and medicine, Wikipedia is pretty reliable, and for the most part on older history; but for current politics and bios, where party machiens and p.r. firms must necessarily intervene, pretending to be regular editors (which many are, having established themselves by writing hockey articles and celeb bios and such), is why it can never have credibility as a neutral, reliable source for political coverage. This article is a travesty, to put it mildly.223.206.149.128 (talk) 15:38, 3 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

"Canada's warrant-less wiretap law"

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I cant find a satisfactory reference to this quote. I don't think it is referring to Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act. Does anyone have a reference to what the Canadian Press is talking about in the cited article? [12] Thanks DSatYVR (talk) 16:28, 13 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

C-30. But it's not the original name. It's changed every 6 months or so after it's stricken down. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.118.249.67 (talk) 08:11, 14 May 2014 (UTC)Reply

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